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Could this be the start of good things to come ? NAIROBI, 5 Sep 2006 (IRIN) - Somalia's transitional government on
Tuesday hailed an agreement to unify armed groups allied to it with
forces loyal to the country's increasingly influential Islamic courts
as an important first step towards restoring peace. Representatives
from the Transitional Federal Government and the Union of Islamic
Courts (UIC) agreed on Monday during talks mediated by the League of
Arab States in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, to "reconstitute the
Somali national army and the national police force and work towards
reintegration of the forces of the Islamic Courts, the TFG and other
armed militias in the country". In view of the agreement in Khartoum, a special summit of the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), the regional body
that has spearheaded efforts to restore security in the Horn of Africa
country, was downgraded to what the host, Kenya, termed "a forum for
informal consultations". Kenya's foreign ministry offered no
further details on the decision to turn Tuesday's planned
"extra-ordinary summit" into a consultative session attended by
Somalia's interim President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, Ethiopia's Prime
Minister Meles Zenawi and the host, President Mwai Kibaki of Kenya. The
IGAD has been pushing for a quick deployment of a peacekeeping force to
Somalia despite opposition from the UIC. The TFG and the UIC
have been in confrontation since June, when forces belonging to the
Islamic group seized control of Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, after
defeating the warlords who took control of the city following the
toppling in 1991 of the regime headed by the late Muhammad Siyad Barre. The
UIC has been extending its authority to other areas of southern
Somalia, much to the chagrin of the TFG, a fledgling administration set
up in 2004 following reconciliation talks in Kenya between Somalia's
various clans and political factions. "Combining the forces of
the government, the Islamic courts and other militias is the first step
towards peace in Somalia," said TFG spokesman Abdirahman Dinari. "The
main problem in Somalia has been security. If you want to restore
peace, you must first recruit the armed people who have been harming
others and bring them together. That is also the only way through which
you can disarm other groups," said Dinari, explaining the apparent
priority given to the military aspect of the civil conflict in Somalia. At
the meeting in Khartoum on Monday, both the TFG and the UIC pledged
their commitment to an agreement on 22 June when they undertook to
recognise each other and engage in further dialogue. The latest
agreement also calls for both sides to meet again in Khartoum on 30
October for talks on the political aspects of their differences,
including power-sharing arrangements. In a related development,
hundreds of Mogadishu residents gathered in the city on Tuesday in yet
another demonstration called to show disapproval of the plans to send
African peacekeepers to Somalia. But Dinari dismissed the protest as
"propaganda" by a few leaders in Mogadishu who had a "phobia" about an
international force. "The majority of Somalis want help from IGAD and
the international community," he said. The United Nations World
Food Programme (WFP) meanwhile announced that for the first time in
more than a decade it had delivered a consignment of food aid through
the port of Mogadishu. This was expected to significantly cut the cost
of food distribution in the country. The MV Redline docked at
Mogadishu port on Sunday loaded with 3,300 tonnes of food, including
2,400 tonnes of cereals, 780 tonnes of pulses, 90 tonnes of blended
food and 30 tonnes of vegetable oil. The food would be trucked to the
drought-stricken regions of Bay and Bakool in the south. Leo van
der Velden, WFP's acting director for Somalia, said WFP would send an
assessment team to Mogadishu to make recommendations on how WFP could
help repair facilities at the port, which has not been in use since
1995 because rival factions would not agree on how to share revenue
from the facility. |